“The Best We Can With What We Got”: Mediating Social and Cultural Capital in a Title I School

This study examined teachers' perceptions and attitudes of Title I students at an urban elementary school in which over 90% of the student population receives free or reduced-priced lunch. Using participant observation and in-depth interviews, this research analyzed three avenues for Title I st...

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Main Author: Eisenberg, Jarin Rachel
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/1948
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2947&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-29472020-01-04T03:35:32Z “The Best We Can With What We Got”: Mediating Social and Cultural Capital in a Title I School Eisenberg, Jarin Rachel This study examined teachers' perceptions and attitudes of Title I students at an urban elementary school in which over 90% of the student population receives free or reduced-priced lunch. Using participant observation and in-depth interviews, this research analyzed three avenues for Title I students to acquire cultural and social capital at school: material and non-material resources, language acquisition, and the building of positive teacher-student relationships. In order to analyze these avenues, this study explored the following questions: How do teachers talk about and perceive Title I students? Do their attitudes and the images constructed from these perceptions impact students' ability to build positive teacher-student relationships? Do these perceptions and attitudes impact students' opportunities to build social and cultural capital? Do the resources afforded to students aide the acquisition of cultural capital? What expectations do teachers have for students' language usage and do these expectations hinder the acquisition of cultural capital? These questions guided my data collection process and analysis on how social and cultural capital operates within a Title I school. This study found that students attending Sherwood did not have access to quality material resources such as books and computers. However, they did have exposure to non-material resources such as nutritional programs that provided students' avenues to acquire cultural capital through dominant cultural experiences. Students' acquisition of Standard English was another avenue for students to acquire cultural capital. Teachers at Sherwood held different expectations for African American students and Spanish speaking students. African American students were constantly corrected when they did not speak Standard English by white teachers. In contrast, Spanish-speaking students were not corrected because teachers did not view their language as a disruption to the class. My findings suggest that African American students did not know why Standard English was important. Thus, it is likely that they did not learn how to activate this form of capital to their social benefit. In contrast, the cultural codes Spanish-speaking students were perceived as of higher value and incorporated in the school. Last, this study found teachers' perceptions of Title I students did not always hinder their ability to form positive teacher-student relationships, but may have helped these relationships to form because of teachers' perceptions of students' home life. Throughout this study, I explored the strategies and obstacles faced by Title I teachers and students as well as how these affect the acquisition of cultural and social capital. 2009-04-06T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/1948 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2947&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons No Child Left Behind Minority Students Low-Income Resources Teacherstudent Relationships American Studies Arts and Humanities
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic No Child Left Behind
Minority Students
Low-Income
Resources
Teacherstudent Relationships
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
spellingShingle No Child Left Behind
Minority Students
Low-Income
Resources
Teacherstudent Relationships
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
Eisenberg, Jarin Rachel
“The Best We Can With What We Got”: Mediating Social and Cultural Capital in a Title I School
description This study examined teachers' perceptions and attitudes of Title I students at an urban elementary school in which over 90% of the student population receives free or reduced-priced lunch. Using participant observation and in-depth interviews, this research analyzed three avenues for Title I students to acquire cultural and social capital at school: material and non-material resources, language acquisition, and the building of positive teacher-student relationships. In order to analyze these avenues, this study explored the following questions: How do teachers talk about and perceive Title I students? Do their attitudes and the images constructed from these perceptions impact students' ability to build positive teacher-student relationships? Do these perceptions and attitudes impact students' opportunities to build social and cultural capital? Do the resources afforded to students aide the acquisition of cultural capital? What expectations do teachers have for students' language usage and do these expectations hinder the acquisition of cultural capital? These questions guided my data collection process and analysis on how social and cultural capital operates within a Title I school. This study found that students attending Sherwood did not have access to quality material resources such as books and computers. However, they did have exposure to non-material resources such as nutritional programs that provided students' avenues to acquire cultural capital through dominant cultural experiences. Students' acquisition of Standard English was another avenue for students to acquire cultural capital. Teachers at Sherwood held different expectations for African American students and Spanish speaking students. African American students were constantly corrected when they did not speak Standard English by white teachers. In contrast, Spanish-speaking students were not corrected because teachers did not view their language as a disruption to the class. My findings suggest that African American students did not know why Standard English was important. Thus, it is likely that they did not learn how to activate this form of capital to their social benefit. In contrast, the cultural codes Spanish-speaking students were perceived as of higher value and incorporated in the school. Last, this study found teachers' perceptions of Title I students did not always hinder their ability to form positive teacher-student relationships, but may have helped these relationships to form because of teachers' perceptions of students' home life. Throughout this study, I explored the strategies and obstacles faced by Title I teachers and students as well as how these affect the acquisition of cultural and social capital.
author Eisenberg, Jarin Rachel
author_facet Eisenberg, Jarin Rachel
author_sort Eisenberg, Jarin Rachel
title “The Best We Can With What We Got”: Mediating Social and Cultural Capital in a Title I School
title_short “The Best We Can With What We Got”: Mediating Social and Cultural Capital in a Title I School
title_full “The Best We Can With What We Got”: Mediating Social and Cultural Capital in a Title I School
title_fullStr “The Best We Can With What We Got”: Mediating Social and Cultural Capital in a Title I School
title_full_unstemmed “The Best We Can With What We Got”: Mediating Social and Cultural Capital in a Title I School
title_sort “the best we can with what we got”: mediating social and cultural capital in a title i school
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2009
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/1948
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2947&context=etd
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